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FOSS K-8 Assessment System
Teachers who use hands-on methods of teaching have known for years
that their students were learning science. Now FOSS has tools to
provide evidence of learninga fully integrated assessment
component that permits continual monitoring of student progress
during a module as well as summary information on student performance.
The methods range from totally unobtrusive observation of students
while they engage in their science investigations to tightly designed
evaluative tools. It all adds up to a very thorough look at student
achievement.
What do we want to know about student learning? This is the fundamental
question that the FOSS team had to answer before developing the
assessment program. After lengthy consideration three dimensions
of learning, called assessment variables, were identified.
1. Content Knowledge
What do students know about the natural world? What can they report
about objects and organisms and the principles that govern natural
events? Content knowledge is one important goal of the FOSS program,
and a substantial number of tools and strategies are used to acquire
data about students content acquisition.
2. Conducting Investigations
The enterprise of science is characterized by a number of activities
that serve the purpose of acquiring information about the natural
world. These include systematic observations, experimentation, equipment
design, data organization, and much more. Can students conduct investigations
to obtain data and extract meaning from those data? The FOSS program
has performance assessments incorporated into the investigations
to provide information about this important dimension of student
growth.
3. Building Explanations
Making sense out of experiences and incorporating that sense into
an ever-deepening knowledge of the natural world is the highest
order of achievement FOSS expects to provide for students. At this
level of understanding students can put their knowledge to work
to solve problems and make considered decisions that will affect
how humans relate to the natural world. The process of generating
explanations exercises the mind in ways that have implications for
reasoned thinking in all aspects of school and life. The FOSS program
has tools to assess this dimension of learning and discourse.
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